Higgs and Effective Field Theory - HEFT 2024

Europe/Zurich
Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte (Bologna)

Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

Bologna

Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
Ilaria Brivio (University & INFN Bologna), Davide Pagani (Universita e INFN, Bologna (IT)), Fabio Maltoni (Universite Catholique de Louvain (UCL) (BE) and Università di Bologna)
Description

HEFT is an annual workshop focusing on the use of effective field theories to search for physics beyond the Standard Model. A broad range of topics are encouraged, ranging from collider phenomenology and formal aspects to the latest experimental updates on dedicated searches. The meeting aims to foster discussions between theorists and phenomenologists from varied backgrounds as well as with experimental colleagues.

The 2024 edition is organised as an in-person event at the University of Bologna, Italy. 
The workshop will begin in the morning of Wednesday, June 12th and end in the early afternoon on Friday, June 14th. A reception will be organized on Wednesday evening and the conference dinner will take place on Thursday evening.

 

Supported by INFN and by the Department of physics and Astronomy - University of Bologna

Participants
  • Adam Falkowski
  • Adam Martin
  • Adrián Moreno Sánchez
  • Ajdin Palavric
  • Alejo Nahuel Rossia
  • Alexandre Salas-Bernárdez
  • Alfredo Stanzione
  • Anders Eller Thomsen
  • Andres Vasquez
  • Anisha .
  • Ben Pecjak
  • Ben Smith
  • Celine Degrande
  • Chang-Yuan Yao
  • Chia-Hsien Shen
  • Claudio Severi
  • Daniel Wendler
  • Dario Buttazzo
  • Davide Pagani
  • Duarte Fontes
  • Eetu Loisa
  • Eleni Vryonidou
  • Elie Hammou
  • Eugenia Celada
  • Fabio Maltoni
  • Federica Fabbri
  • Felix Wilsch
  • Francesco Montagno Bozzone
  • Fuensanta Vilches Bravo
  • Gauthier Durieux
  • Giuseppe Ventura
  • Graeme Crawford
  • Gudrun Heinrich
  • Hesham El Faham
  • Ilaria Brivio
  • Jasper Roosmale Nepveu
  • Javier Fuentes-Martin
  • Javier López Miras
  • Jonathan Kley
  • Ken Mimasu
  • Konstantin Schmid
  • Ling-Xiao Xu
  • Luc Schnell
  • Luca Naterop
  • Luigi Carlo Bresciani
  • Luis Gil
  • Maria Jose Herrero
  • Marion Thomas
  • Marko Pesut
  • Marko Simonovic
  • Matteo Maltoni
  • Michal Ryczkowski
  • Mikael Chala
  • Minyuan Jiang
  • Mohammad Alminawi
  • Mohammad Kassir
  • Nudžeim Selimović
  • Pablo Olgoso
  • Peter Stangl
  • Pham Ngoc Hoa Vuong
  • Priyanka Lamba
  • Rudi Rahn
  • Sally Dawson
  • Shahram Vatani
  • Shakeel Ur Rahaman
  • Simone Tentori
  • Stefano Di Noi
  • Uli Haisch
  • Veronica Sanz
  • Víctor Miralles
  • Xu-Xiang Li
  • +18
    • 09:00 10:40
      Session: Opening and multiboson Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Ilaria Brivio (University & INFN Bologna)
      • 09:00
        Welcome 5m
      • 09:05
        Why use SMEFT? 20m
        Speaker: Sally Dawson (BNL)
      • 09:35
        Triple-gauge couplings in LHC diboson production: a SMEFT view from every angle 15m

        This study explores fully leptonic WZ and WW production within the SMEFT framework at NLO in QCD, focusing on both CP-even and CP-odd triple gauge coupling dimension-six operators. We investigate the off-shell production processes and contrast our findings with those derived under the narrow-width approximation. Alongside the conventional kinematical observables, we examine polarisation-related observables and angular coefficients. Moreover, we also assess potential SMEFT effects on asymmetry observables. Furthermore, through a sensitivity analysis, we identify critical LHC observables that are particularly sensitive to SMEFT-induced modifications, thereby shedding light on potential avenues for new physics searches in diboson production at the LHC.

        Speaker: Hesham El Faham (The University of Manchester)
      • 09:55
        CP violation in gluon-induced diboson processes 10m

        The existence of CP violation is key to address the mystery of matter-antimatter asymmetry in the Universe. As the amount of CP violation in the SM is insufficient, the search for new sources of CP violation is of high priority for the LHC programme. We study CP violation within the Standard Model Effective Field Theory, focusing on the impact of CP-odd dimension-6 operators in gluon-induced diboson production. We start by extending the SMEFTatNLO implementation to include the relevant operators and study double Higgs, double Z/W, and associated ZH and H+jet production. In addition we compute analytically the helicity amplitudes of the aforementioned processes at one loop and with one insertion of a CP-odd operator. We analyse the impact of CP-even and CP-odd operators on kinematic distributions of key observables in these processes. We identify certain observables that can lead to powerful probes of these operators and discrimination between CP-even and CP-odd interactions at the HL-LHC.

        Speaker: Marion Thomas
      • 10:10
        EFT observable stability under NLO corrections through interference revival 10m

        The interference between the Standard Model (SM) and higher-dimensional effective operators can change sign over the phase space, leading to cancellations between different positive and negative terms that can make these effects hard to measure. The aim of this talk is to present a method to establish the efficiencies of given observables in separating the opposite-sign contributions to the interference, allowing to revive it in experiments. This strategy is based on the matrix element, but it is more general and can be used for any new physics scenario that shows a cancellation for the interference, in the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT) and outside. I will show the application of this method to two dimension-six operators in the SMEFT, for which the interference suppression is well known: the anomalous gluon operator and its electroweak (EW) analogous, at Leading Order (LO) in the first case and at Next-to-Leading Order (NLO) in the second. Different processes that are sensitive to these objects will be analysed, including multi-jet, di-boson and EW Vector Boson Fusion (VBF) ones. I will highlight how the interference-reviving variables we found can yield better bounds on the operator coefficient, even at interference level.

        Speaker: Matteo Maltoni
      • 10:25
        Triboson production in the SMEFT 10m

        The processes of triboson production in high-energy proton–proton collisions provide a unique mean to probe the quartic interactions between EW gauge bosons and to perform indirect searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. Despite their small cross-sections, the production of 𝑉𝛾𝛾, 𝑉𝑉𝛾, 𝑉𝑉𝑉 (𝑉 = 𝑊 or 𝑍) at centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV at the LHC has recently been observed by the ATLAS and CMS experiments. In this talk I'll present a SMEFT analysis based on total rates and differential distributions of triboson processes and show that NLO QCD corrections have striking effects on dimension-6 operators.
        I'll present constraints on a subset of SMEFT operators from a global EW fit including electroweak precision observables (EWPOs), diboson and triboson processes and show that, when quadratic EFT contributions are included, the diboson and triboson production at LHC can significantly improve the bounds in the directions left unconstrained by EWPOs.

        Speaker: Eugenia Celada
    • 10:40 11:10
      Coffee Break 30m Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 11:10 13:00
      Session: Precision Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Ramona Groeber (Università di Padova and INFN, Sezione di Padova)
      • 11:10
        Precision calculation in SMEFT 20m
        Speaker: Ben Pecjak (IPPP Durham)
      • 11:40
        The running of Higgs decays at dimension eight in the SMEFT 15m

        Higgs decays to $gg$, $\gamma\gamma$ and $\gamma Z$ are important physical processes for Higgs physics with the latter having been recently observed at ATLAS and CMS; all of these decays arise at loop-level in the SM. Under the assumption of weakly coupled, renormalizable UV scenarios, the SMEFT can also only receive matching contributions to these processes at loop-level at dimension-6. Furthermore, study of the renormalization group equations shows that no tree-level generated operators can induce the running of these decays.
        However, considering the arguments which explain the renormalization structure and perturbative origin of the operators at dimension-six, the dimension-eight operators responsible for Higgs decays seem to have a richer structure, namely possibly being tree-level generated and receiving renormalization contributions from other tree operators. In this talk we will go over the dimension-eight parameterization of these Higgs decays and verify that the linear combination of Wilson coefficients contributing to these processes does vanish at tree-level as expected. We also verify that, unlike at dimension-six, trees can mix into loops in the running of $h\rightarrow \gamma Z$, an effect only captured when considering the dimension-eight SMEFT. This structure points to better basis choice to describe these processes. We will also show that this effect is not only new qualitatively but it can also be observed at future experiments for some scenarios.

        Speaker: Guilherme Guedes (DESY)
      • 12:00
        Field redefinitions and infinite field anomalous dimension 10m

        Field redefinitions are commonly used to remove redundant operators from the Lagrangian and thereby transform to a minimal operator basis. This is, for example, necessary when the theory has first been renormalized with off-shell kinematics in a larger basis. Working through an explicit example in the O(N) model, I will argue that such field redefinitions, while leaving the $S$-matrix invariant and finite, lead to infinite field anomalous dimensions $\gamma_\phi$ at two loops. These divergences cannot be removed by counterterms without reintroducing redundant operators.

        Speaker: Jasper Roosmale Nepveu
      • 12:15
        The LEFT at NLL accuracy 10m

        Below the electroweak scale, the LEFT provides a systematic approximation of both heavy SM and BSM physics. When extending the LEFT to next-to-leading-log accuracy, a number of technical challenges arise. In this talk, I will discuss the basis construction in the 't Hooft-Veltman scheme, $\gamma_5$ and evanescent operators, the restoration of chiral symmetry, and the role of redundant operators in the cancellation of subdivergences.

        Speaker: Luca Naterop (University of Zürich and PSI)
      • 12:30
        Loop-corrected Fierz Identities and Evanescent shifts 10m

        In Effective Field Theories, evanescent operators are introduced to compensate for the breakdown of four-dimensional Dirac identities (e.g. Fierz Identities) when used in combination with dimensional regularization.

        In this talk, we provide an alternative approach where contributions of evanescent operators are viewed as corrections to d=4 Dirac relations. This new perspective not only simplifies computations but provides a clearer understanding of the treatment of these evanescent contributions in the context of NLO change of operator bases.

        Speaker: Marko Pesut (University of Zürich)
      • 12:45
        On $\gamma_5$ schemes and the interplay of SMEFT operators (in the Higgs-gluon coupling and beyond) 10m

        We present a calculation of the four-top quark operator contributions to Higgs production via gluon fusion in the Standard Model Effective Field Theory. The four-top operators enter for the first time via two-loop diagrams. Due to their chiral structure they contain $\gamma_5$, so special care needs to be taken when using dimensional regularisation for the loop integrals. We use two different schemes for the continuation of $\gamma_5$ to $D$ space-time dimensions in our calculations and present a mapping for the parameters in the two schemes. This generically leads to an interplay of different operators, such as four-top operators, chromomagnetic operators or Yukawa-type operators at the loop level. We validate our results by examples of matching onto UV models.

        We also present recent developements towards a comprehensive map between NDR and BMHV at $\mathcal{O}\left( g_s^2 \right)$ for all the operators in the Warsaw basis.

        Speaker: Stefano Di Noi (Università di Padova and INFN, Sezione di Padova)
    • 13:00 14:30
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:30 16:15
      Session: Matching Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Ken Mimasu (University of Southampton)
      • 14:30
        Recent developments in the EFT matching and RG running. 20m
        Speaker: Javier Fuentes-Martin (Universidad de Granada)
      • 15:00
        EFT matching in spontaneously broken gauge theories 15m

        There has been much progress in performing and understanding EFT matching at the one-loop order in the last decade; however, the methods have rarely been applied to the case of spontaneously broken gauge theories. In this talk, I reexamine the role of gauge symmetries in EFT matching. It is possible to prove the validity of the hard-region matching formula when using the background field (BF) gauge(s), in line with common thinking. In the case of spontaneously broken gauge theories, there are challenges to proceeding with the ordinary BF gauge, to the extent that it prevents a constructive proof. As an alternative, I will introduce a partially fixed BF gauge, which, in addition to being simpler than the ordinary BF gauge, allows for demonstrating the validity of the usual hard-region matching formula.

        Speaker: Dr Anders Eller Thomsen (University of Bern)
      • 15:20
        One-loop effective action up to dimension eight 15m

        Indirect searches for new physics require precise measurements of low-energy observables. The EFT framework suitably accommodates the new physics contributions to such observables. As we aim for higher precision, it becomes necessary to incorporate higher-dimensional operators into our analysis as well. In this context, I will discuss the matching of UV theory with low energy theory up to dimension eight. A few years ago, the matching of UV theory to low energy theory was generalised, and a master formula known as Universal one-loop effective action (UOLEA) was developed and it was restricted to dimension six. We have used the method of Heat-Kernel to extend the UOLEA to incorporate dimension eight terms.

        Speaker: Mr shakeel ur rahaman
      • 15:40
        The SMEFT One Loop Dictionary 15m

        Effective Field Theories provide an ordering criterion to classify all the possible new physics models, depending on the size of their contributions. At any fixed order in operator dimension and loop expansion, this classification can be organized in the form of UV/IR dictionaries, giving an efficient access to which operators are generated by a certain model and which models can generate a specific operator.

        We present the complete classification of renormalizable extensions of the Standard Model with new scalars and fermions that can contribute to the dimension six SMEFT up to one loop. The results are encoded in a mathematica package called SOLD (SMEFT One Loop Dictionary), that provides extra functionalities to facilitate the calculation of the complete one-loop matching of any relevant model via Matchmakereft.

        Speaker: Pablo Olgoso
      • 16:00
        Methods for on-shell matching 10m

        Effective field theories (EFTs) have become an essential tool in the search of new physics beyond the Standard Model. The calculation of the Wilson coefficients of the EFT for specific new physics models is usually performed by matching off-shell one-light-particle irreducible Green functions, which requires an off-shell basis of effective operators. This so-called Green's basis includes some operators that are redundant and can be written in terms of a minimal, physical basis when computing on-shell observables. This reduction is traditionally achieved by applying field redefinitions and equations of motion (EOMs). However, the absence of a systematic way of identifying the optimal field redefinition, coupled with the limitation that EOMs are only valid up to linear order in the perturbative expansion, calls for the search of a more systematic approach to the reduction of the Green's basis.

        Our proposed method consists on performing a tree-level on-shell matching between the Green's and the physical bases. This matching requires a delicate cancellation between non-local contributions in both theories that we sidestep by evaluating the amplitudes with randomly generated physical momenta. Here, we present the application of this procedure to the dimension-eight Green's basis reduction of a toy model consisting on a real scalar field with $\mathbb{Z}_2$ symmetry. Furthermore, we derive the reduction of a large set of operators in the SMEFT as well as some examples of renormalization group equations.

        Speaker: JAVIER LÓPEZ MIRAS
    • 16:15 16:45
      Coffee Break 30m Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 16:45 18:10
      Session: Top Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Davide Pagani (Universita e INFN, Bologna (IT))
      • 16:45
        Precision tests of third-generation four-quark SMEFT operators 15m

        In the framework of the SMEFT we derive the indirect constraints on third-generation four-quark operators that arise from electroweak precision measurements as well as flavour physics. To this purpose we calculate the dominant one- and two-loop contributions to the observables in question. We find that the considered loop effects can lead to better constraints than those from fits to top-quark data collected at the LHC.

        Speaker: Uli Haisch (MPI Munich)
      • 17:05
        Collider sensitivity to SMEFT heavy-quark operators at one-loop in top-quark processes 15m

        We study the effects of four-heavy-quark operators in the production of top quarks in the framework of the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT) at the LHC. In particular, we compute for the first time the total contribution of the four-top-quark operator which enters only at the one-loop level in the top-quark pair production process. Analytical results at one-loop are presented for the gluon- and quark-initiated sub-processes, which allowed a first complete validation of the SMEFT@NLO in Madgraph5_aMC@NLO. The 95% CL bounds on four-heavy-quark operators from the available top-quark pair and four-top-quark production data are provided, which are complementary to other bounds found in the literature. We focus on the comparison of the sensitivities of the top-quark pair and the four-top-quark production processes, where in the latter case the four-top-quark operator contributes at tree-level. We conclude that the sensitivities of the two processes to four-heavy-quark operators are comparable. The projected sensitivities of both processes at HL-LHC are also presented.

        Speaker: Dr Andres Vasquez (University of Bonn)
      • 17:25
        Indirect constraints on top quark operators from a global SMEFT analysis 10m

        In this talk I will focus on a model independent analysis of top-philic New Physics scenarios, under the assumption that only effective operators involving top quarks are generated at tree level. After an introduction on the SMEFT framework, I will illustrate the procedure we used to derive indirect constraints on Wilson Coefficients, combining a large set of observables: B and K decays, meson mixing observables, precision electroweak and Higgs measurements, anomalous magnetic moments, LFV processes, LFU tests and the Cabibbo anomaly. I will show the results through one-parameter, two-parameters and global fits, pointing out the interplay and the complementarity among the observables. I will also compare our results to direct bounds provided by top quark productions at LHC.

        Speaker: Alfredo Stanzione
      • 17:40
        Couplings of axion-like particles in linear and chiral EFT realisations 10m

        Similarly to the difference between HEFT and SMEFT, a SM extension with an Axion-like Particle (ALP) can be parametrised in terms of a linear or chiral ALP-EFT, depending on whether the Higgs field is introduced as a doublet or a singlet, respectively.
        In the linear case we particularly focus on the coupling of a light ALP to top quarks.
        We use high-energy LHC probes and examine both the direct probe to this coupling in associated production of a top-pair with an ALP, and the indirect probe through loop-induced gluon fusion to an ALP leading to top pairs.
        Using the latest LHC Run II data, we provide the best limit on this coupling and furthermore compare these limits with those obtained from loop-induced couplings in diboson final states.
        In the chiral case, the EFT also contains tree-level couplings of an ALP to three bosons which give rise to the ALP-induced production of two Higgs bosons in association with a Z boson.
        We examine the existing constraints from di-Higgs searches at Run 2 of the LHC and find that, despite the presence of extra objects in the final state, these searches are sensitive to ALP couplings.
        Furthermore, we propose a dedicated search for HHZ states.
        Finally, we compare the chiral EFT predictions with the contributions from top quark loops in the linear case.

        Speaker: Fabian Esser
      • 17:55
        New Physics virtual correction to top-pair production 10m

        Being the heaviest fermion and having a Yukawa interaction almost equal to one, the top-quark represents one of the most interesting portals to New Physics (NP). If it is light or belongs to a secluded sector, NP can be difficult to detect in colliders with traditional methods. An alternative way, at least for setting bounds, is studying the virtual corrections to SM processes. Kinematical distributions of top-quark pairs produced at the LHC are studied both by the CMS and ATLAS experiments. A plethora of data for both the threshold region and the tails of the distributions are already available. In addition, SM theoretical predictions are known at very high accuracy (NNLO QCD and beyond). In this talk I will discuss the effect of virtual corrections to top-pair production coming from different types of NP: Axion-Like-Particles, CP-even and CP-odd scalars. I will also discuss the opportunity that top-pair production opens to bound new-particle interactions or probe their existence.

        Speaker: Simone Tentori (UCLouvain)
    • 18:15 18:30
      Group Photo Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 18:30 21:00
      Reception Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 09:00 10:45
      Session: Amplitudes and on-shell methods Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Gauthier Durieux (CP3 - UCLouvain)
      • 09:00
        Recent developments in EFT scattering amplitudes and positivity constraints 20m
        Speaker: Chia-Hsien Shen (National Taiwan University)
      • 09:30
        Construction and conversion of operator bases in Effective Field Theories 15m

        The effective field theory is an important approach for systematically parameterizing new physics beyond the Standard Model. A central concern in effective field theory is constructing effective operator bases. This work focuses on studying operator bases in effective field theory. I will introduce a general method for constructing on-shell operator bases and off-shell Green's bases in Lorentz-invariant effective field theories. Furthermore, I will present the method for finding the conversion relations among operator bases.

        Speaker: Zhe Ren (The high-energy physics group (FTAE) of the University of Granada)
      • 09:50
        Exploring ALP EFTs: Operator Basis Construction and Hilbert Series Techniques 15m

        Axions and axion-like particles (ALPs) hold promise in addressing fundamental puzzles in physics. In this talk, we use effective field theories (EFTs) to investigate the intricate interactions between ALPs and Standard Model particles across various energy scales. Employing Hilbert series techniques, we unveil the underlying structure of these interactions, distinguishing between those that preserve or break shift symmetry. Our analysis extends to computing the Hilbert series and constructing operator bases up to dimension 8 for both aSMEFT and aLEFT. Additionally, we use the Hilbert series method to enumerate sources of CP violation in terms of CP-even, CP-odd, and CP-violating operators. Complementing theoretical insights, we introduce a Mathematica package for Hilbert series computations. This package is designed to address general problems, allowing people to use it for a wide range of applications beyond the scope of ALP EFTs.

        Speaker: Chang-Yuan Yao
      • 10:10
        Heavy Dark Matter EFT for any spin 15m

        We construct an effective field theory for non-relativistic heavy dark matter of arbitrary spin based on the Little group formalism. We present the most general HDMEFT basis up to dimension seven and show that it reproduces the non-relativistic spin 1/2 case presented in the literature. We also discuss the matching onto the relativistic DM EFT.

        Speaker: Sandra Kvedaraite (University of Granada)
      • 10:30
        Anomalous Dimensions via on-shell Methods: Operator Mixing and Leading Mass Effects 10m

        We elaborate on the application of on-shell and unitarity-based methods for evaluating renormalization group coefficients, and generalize this framework to account for the mixing of operators with different dimensions and leading mass effects. We derive a master formula for anomalous dimensions stemming from the general structure of operator mixings, up to two-loop order, and show how the Higgs low-energy theorem can be exploited to include leading mass effects. A few applications on the renormalization properties of popular effective field theories showcase the strength of the proposed approach, which drastically reduces the complexity of standard loop calculations. Our results provide a powerful tool to interpret experimental measurements of low-energy observables, such as flavor violating processes or electric and magnetic dipole moments, as induced by new physics emerging above the electroweak scale.

        Speaker: Luigi Carlo Bresciani (University & INFN Padova)
    • 10:45 11:15
      Coffee Break 30m Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 11:15 12:50
      Session: RGE, flavor, four-fermion operators Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Celine Catherine A Degrande
      • 11:15
        Impact of renormalisation group equation on Higgs production in the SMEFT 10m

        We study the impact of RGE running and mixing of SMEFT operators on differential observables in $Hj$, $ttH$ and $HH$ production at the LHC. We focus on a subset of operators closed under the QCD-induced anomalous dimension matrix and explore the impact of employing a fixed or dynamical scale on the EFT predictions for the Higgs transverse momentum and Higgs pair invariant mass spectra. We then explore the impact of taking into account RGE effects on the constraints obtained on the Wilson coefficients through fits to current data, as well as projections for the HL-LHC.

        Speaker: Giuseppe Ventura
      • 11:30
        The global flavour structure of the LEFT 15m

        Below the electroweak scale, the gauge interactions of QED and QCD are responsible for the running of the many effective operators of the LEFT (aka WET). As these gauge interactions also preserve both parity and flavour to all orders, decomposing the operators according to their parity and many flavour charges vastly simplifies their running.

        Such a decomposition makes the one-loop running of a generic LEFT, from the W mass down to the b mass, semi-analytically soluble. I will show how this gives a more global picture of how flavour phenomenology below the electroweak scale matches on to that above it, using a case study of operators relevant for semi-leptonic B decays.

        Speaker: David Sutherland
      • 11:50
        Froggatt-Nielsen Models Meet SMEFT 10m

        The Froggatt-Nielsen (FN) mechanism is one of the oldest and simplest attempts at explaining the striking hierarchies observed in the fermion masses and mixings. Given that FN models give rise to the correct fermion masses and mixings by construction and that the new particles predicted by the models are typically assumed to be heavy, it is not clear if the models are experimentally falsifiable. In this talk, we try to shed light on the question of falsifiability by analysing the infrared features of FN models whilst staying agnostic about the fine details of the model. We achieve our goal by writing down a FN effective field theory, capturing all the local interactions allowed in the ultraviolet, and matching it to the Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) at the tree- and 1-loop-level. Our results indicate a rich and non-trivial signature of FN models on the SMEFT Wilson coefficients, leaving us with falsifiable predictions that could be studied at current and future colliders.

        Speaker: Eetu Loisa
      • 12:05
        SMEFT effects in neutrino and low-energy experiments 20m
        Speaker: Adam Falkowski (LPT Orsay)
      • 12:35
        Missing Energy plus Jet in the SMEFT 10m

        The Standard Model Effective Field Theory serves as a widely utilized framework for exploring new physics (NP) effects in a model-independent manner.
        In previous studies, Drell-Yan collider data has stood out as a promising signature due to its energy enhancement relative to Standard Model predictions.
        In our investigation, we expand on this, by analyzing the "missing energy + jet" signature, which exhibits various forms of energy growth depending upon the operator type in play.
        Overall we consider gluonic and electroweak dipole operators, semileptonic four-fermion operators and Z-penguin operators.
        Constraints on gluon dipole operators are the strongest, probing NP scales up to $14 \;\mathrm{TeV}$, and improve over existing ones from collider studies.
        Additionally, our analysis of flavor-changing neutral current four-fermion operators has yielded competitive bounds compared to existing literature, and led to improvements for certain flavor combinations.

        Speaker: Daniel Wendler (TU Dortmund)
    • 12:50 14:30
      Lunch 1h 40m
    • 14:30 16:20
      Session: ALPs, BSM connection, geometry Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Adam Orion Martin (University of Notre Dame (US))
      • 14:30
        Small Instanton-induced Flavor Invariants and the Axion Potential 15m

        Small instantons which increase the axion mass due to an appropriate modification of QCD at a high energy scale, can also enhance the effect of CP-violating operators to shift the axion potential minimum by an amount $\theta_{\rm ind}\,$, which is severely constrained by neutron electric dipole moment experiments. In this talk, focusing on the dimension-six CP-odd operators in the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT), we will introduce a new set of determinant-like flavor invariants that naturally arise in the instanton computation of the quantity $\theta_{\rm ind}$. We will show that these flavor invariants are useful for anticipating how CP-violating SMEFT operators participate in the instanton computations and for classifying the leading effects from the Wilson coefficients. More generally, the flavor invariants, together with an instanton Naive Dimensional Analysis, can be used to more accurately estimate small instanton effects in the axion potential that arise from any SMEFT operator and to conveniently probe the impact of different flavor assumptions on the bounds obtained from $\theta_{\rm ind}$.
        Eventually, we will present our recent development on the shift-breaking interactions between axions and SM particles generated by small instanton dynamics.

        Reference: arXiv: 2402.09361 (https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.09361)

        Speaker: Hoa Vuong (DESY)
      • 14:50
        EFT tools to probe CP-violating axion-like particles 10m

        CP-violating probes are among the most promising and yet relatively unexplored ways to look for Axion-like particles (ALPs) and to investigate their phenomenology.
        Starting from the most general dimension-5, $SU(3)_{\text{c}} \times U(1)_{\text{em}}$ invariant effective Lagrangian for a CP-violating ALP at the electroweak (EW) scale, we discuss two relevant phenomenological frameworks.
        In the first one, the impact of heavy ALPs ($m_a \gg 1$ GeV) on low-energy CP-violating observables is analyzed in detail.
        In the second one we rather consider lighter ALPs ($m_a \ll 1$ GeV). In this case, QCD can no longer be treated perturbatively and the CPV interactions of ALPs are included in a chiral perturbation theory setup.
        Given the resemblance between our setup and the HEFT one, where the Higgs field is treated as a singlet, parallels between the two scenarios are drawn.

        Speaker: Gabriele Levati (Università degli studi di Padova and INFN Padova)
      • 15:05
        The Standard Model Gauge Group, SMEFT, and Generalized Symmetries 15m

        We discuss heavy particles that can be used to pin down the faithful Standard Model (SM) gauge group and their patterns in the SM effective field theory (SMEFT). These heavy particles are not invariant under a specific $\mathbb{Z}_6$ subgroup of $SU(3)_c\times SU(2)_L \times U(1)_Y$, which however acts trivially on all the SM particles, hence the faithful SM gauge group remains undetermined. Different realizations of the faithful SM gauge group correspond to different spectra of heavy particles, and they also correspond to distinct sets of line operators with one-form global symmetry acting on them. We show that the heavy particles not invariant under the $\mathbb{Z}_6$ group cannot appear in tree-level ultraviolet completions of SMEFT, this enforces us to consider one-loop UV completions of SMEFT to identify the $\mathbb{Z}_6$ non-invariant heavy particles. We demonstrate with examples that correlations between Wilson coefficients provide an efficient way to examine models with $\mathbb{Z}_6$ non-invariant heavy particles. Finally, we prove that all the scalars that can trigger electroweak symmetry breaking must be invariant under the $\mathbb{Z}_6$ group, hence they cannot be used to probe the faithful SM gauge group.

        Speaker: Ling-Xiao Xu (ICTP, Trieste)
      • 15:25
        Effective Field Theories of the MSSM 15m

        We match the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) onto its corresponding low-energy EFTs at one loop. For this purpose, we consider several scenarios: (i) matching the full MSSM onto SMEFT; (ii) integrating out only the lightest of the BSM states (such as the stops, sbottoms, gaugeinos, and Higgsinos), while neglecting the heavier states; (iii) integrating out only the heavy states, while retaining the lightest superpartners in the spectrum of the EFT. For these cases, we present the complete one-loop matching implementation in the Matchete code and discuss the challenges and subtleties involved in the calculation. Additionally, we examine some phenomenological implications and compare the different EFT scenarios.

        Speaker: Felix Wilsch (RWTH Aachen University)
      • 15:45
        A Geometrical Formalism of Functional Matching 15m

        Field space geometry has been fruitful in understanding many aspects of EFT, including basis-independent criteria for distinguishing HEFT vs. SMEFT, reorganization of scattering amplitudes in covariant form, derivation of renormalization group equations and geometric soft theorem. We incorporate field space geometry in functional matching by dividing the field space into light and heavy subspaces. A modified covariant derivative expansion method is proposed to calculate the functional traces while accommodating the covariance of the light subspace geometry. We apply this formalism to the non-linear sigma model and reproduce the effective theory more efficiently compared to other matching methods.

        Speaker: Xu-Xiang Li (University of Utah)
      • 16:05
        Jet Bundle Geometry of Scalar EFTs 10m

        Geometric formulations of scalar field theories have proven valuable in studying the differences between HEFT and SMEFT at the two derivative level by representing fields as coordinates on a 4D manifold and expressing field redefinitions as coordinate transformations.
        We introduce an approach to extend the geometric formulation to higher numbers of derivatives as well as incorporating the potential into a geometric definition by introducing jet bundles where derivatives of fields are treated as independent coordinates on higher-dimensional manifolds.
        The talk will introduce the formalism of bundles showing how a Lagrangian can be expressed geometrically as well as how amplitudes can be constructed from geometric quantities.

        Speaker: Mohammad Alminawi
    • 16:20 16:50
      Coffee Break 30m Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 16:50 18:35
      Session: HEFT and dimension 8 Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Gudrun Heinrich (KIT)
      • 16:50
        Recent progress on Bosonic HEFT: renormalization, matching and colliders 15m

        _
        Some selected aspects of Bosonic HEFT with implications for multiple Higgs production at colliders will be presented. These include: 1) Recent progress on renormalization of 1PI functions and practical applications for specific processes at colliders, 2) The approach of matching UV theories to HEFT by identifying their predictions for amplitudes: the 2HDM case and its non-decoupling effects, 3) The search for sensitivities to Bosonic HEFT coefficients at colliders and the relevance of specific observables to explore potential correlations among those coefficients: the (kappaV, kappa2V) case.

        Speaker: Maria Jose Herrero Solans (Universidad Autonoma de Madrid and IFT/UAM)
      • 17:10
        Loop effects on Higgs and vector boson production in HEFT 10m

        The absence of newly discovered states at high energies makes the use of Effective Field Theories (EFTs) the adequate tool to describe the electroweak sector. Within the available EFTs, the Higgs Effective Field Theory (HEFT) provides the most general parametrization of electroweak physics. In this context, effects of new physics can substantially modify the lowest-order couplings of HEFT and produce large effects on observables that can be directly tied to ultraviolet models. We will consider the effect of one-loop contributions to the production of vector bosons and the Higgs in HEFT and study the impact of possible new physics on these processes.

        Speaker: Mr Carlos Quezada Calonge (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
      • 17:25
        Higgs boson offshell measurements probe non-linearity 15m

        The measurements of off-shell Higgs boson contributions in massive gauge boson pair production are known to probe its electroweak interactions across different energy scales. These are often employed as an estimator of the Higgs boson width in restricted theories of beyond the Standard Model physics. In this talk, I will revisit this measurement in the context of the Higgs Effective Field Theory (HEFT) framework and re-advertise its potential to probe the Higgs boson non-linearity. The relevant non-linear HEFT interactions are constrained by correlating the off-shell with the on-shell measurements. Thus, this so-called off-shell measurement complements related analyses of multi-Higgs final states.

        Speaker: Dr Anisha . (University of Glasgow)
      • 17:45
        Recent developments of dimension 8 effects in SMEFT 20m
        Speaker: Duarte Fontes
      • 18:15
        On the convergence of the SMEFT expansion 15m

        I will discuss a forthcoming paper on the convergence of the SMEFT expansion in the specific case of Drell Yan. By using some top down examples I will show how realistic the use of data binned in energy to better constrain Wilson coefficients is, and when this approach fails. I will also explore when dimension-six squared terms improve the quality of (simplified) fits and when this approach leads to bad results.

        Speaker: Tyler Corbett (University of Vienna)
    • 20:00 21:00
      Social Dinner
    • 09:00 10:45
      Session: Fits Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Eleni Vryonidou (University of Manchester (GB))
      • 09:00
        Global analyses and the role of Machine Learning in EFT searches. 20m
        Speaker: Prof. Veronica Sanz Gonzalez (Universities of Valencia and Sussex)
      • 09:30
        Constraining new physics effective interactions via a global fit of electroweak, Higgs, top, and flavor observables 15m

        We present results from a global fit of dimension-six SMEFT operators that includes electroweak, Higgs-boson, top-quark, and flavor observables. The leading-order scale dependence of the SMEFT Wilson coefficients is consistently included in the evolution from the UV scale to the electroweak scale and the low-energy scale of flavor observables. In defining the SMEFT set of active operators we consider both the $U(3)^5$ and the $U(2)^5$-symmetric limits. The global fit is obtained within the HEPfit framework and is based on the state-of-the-art of both experimental results and theoretical predictions for all the observables considered.

        Speaker: Victor Miralles (University of Manchester)
      • 09:50
        How to fit PDFs in the presence of new physics? 10m

        The interpretation of hadron collider, such as the LHC, data, and the assessment of possible hints of new physics, require the precise knowledge of the proton structure in terms of parton distribution functions (PDFs). In this talk, I present a systematic methodology designed to determine whether and how global PDF fits might inadvertently 'fit away' signs of new physics, described by Effective Field Theory (EFT) corrections, in the high-energy tails of the distributions. I showcase a scenario for the High-Luminosity LHC, in which the PDFs may completely absorb such signs of new physics, thus biasing theoretical predictions and interpretations. I present strategies to single out the effects in this scenario and disentangle the inconsistencies that stem from them. A first solution I discuss is the exploration of the synergy between the high luminosity programme at the LHC and present and future low-energy measurements of large-sea quark distributions. A second one, is to fit simultaneously the PDFs and the new physics signals using the SMEFT framework, which can be done with our publicly released open-source tool SIMUnet.

        Speaker: Elie Hammou (DAMTP, University of Cambridge)
      • 10:05
        smelli 3 - a flavourful global SMEFT likelihood 15m

        We report on a new major version of the Python package smelli - the SMEFT likelihood, which implements a flavourful global likelihood function for the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT), the Weak Effective Theory (WET), and new physics models. No specific flavour structure is assumed and the renormalization group evolution in the SMEFT and the WET is taken into account to consistently combine a large number of observables at many different scales, including electroweak precision observables, Higgs physics, decays of B mesons, kaons, D mesons, muon, and tau, meson mixing observables, lepton flavour violating decays, neutron and nuclear beta decays, and high-mass Drell-Yan tails. Besides the addition of many observables, new features include the new physics dependence of theory uncertainties and a three order of magnitude increase in evaluation speed.

        Speaker: Peter Stangl (CERN)
      • 10:25
        The automation of SMEFT-assisted constraints on UV-complete models 15m

        The ongoing Effective Field Theory (EFT) program at the LHC and elsewhere is motivated by streamlining the connection between experimental data and UV-complete scenarios of heavy new physics beyond the Standard Model (BSM). This connection is provided by matching relations mapping the Wilson coefficients of the EFT to the couplings and masses of UV-complete models. Building upon recent work on the automation of tree-level and one-loop matching in the SMEFT, we present a novel strategy automating the constraint-setting procedure on the parameter space of general heavy UV-models matched to dimension-six SMEFT operators. A new Mathematica package, match2fit, interfaces MatchMakerEFT, which derives the matching relations for a given UV model, and SMEFiT, which provides bounds on the Wilson coefficients by comparing with data. By means of this pipeline and using both tree-level and one-loop matching, we derive bounds on a wide range of single- and multi-particle extensions of the SM from a global dataset composed by LHC and LEP measurements. Whenever possible, we benchmark our results with existing studies. Our framework realises one of the main objectives of the EFT program in particle physics: deploying the SMEFT to bypass the need of directly comparing the predictions of heavy UV models with experimental data.
        Additionally, thanks to upcoming work, this framework allows to easily obtain projected bounds on the same models from HL-LHC, FCC-ee or CEPC projections.
        Based on arXiv:2309.04523 and upcoming work.

        Speaker: Alejo Nahuel Rossia (University of Manchester)
    • 10:45 11:15
      Coffee break 30m Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
    • 11:15 13:05
      Session: New perspectives Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Aula Prodi - Complesso di S. Giovanni in Monte

      Bologna

      Piazza San Giovanni in Monte 2 Bologna, Italy
      Convener: Prof. Fabio Maltoni (Universite Catholique de Louvain (UCL) (BE) and Università di Bologna)
      • 11:15
        EFT of large scale structures in cosmology 20m
        Speaker: Marko Simonovic (CERN)
      • 11:45
        EFTs for finite temperature 20m
        Speaker: Mikael Chala (Universidad de Granada)
      • 12:15
        Dimensionally reduced EFTs for cosmological phase transitions 10m

        The upcoming launch of the LISA interferometer has recently strengthened the interest in exploring SM extensions where a gravitational wave-producing, strong first-order electroweak phase transition (SFOEWPT) occurs in the early universe. One of the preferred approaches to the study of thermal FOPTs is through the construction of a dimensionally reduced effective field theory (3dEFT) where the temperature only appears in the Wilson coefficients.

        In this talk we will summarize the key aspects and advantages of this approach. We will provide a rigorous perturbative method to compute the essential observables for modelling the GW production in a SFOPT, and we will discuss the importance of including higher-order effective operators in these computations, which are often overlooked in the current literature.

        Speaker: Luis Gil (Universidad de Granada)
      • 12:30
        Physics opportunities at future lepton colliders 20m
        Speaker: Dario Buttazzo
      • 13:00
        Closing 5m